WASHINGTON: The National Association of Broadcasters
highlighted the opportunity for greater diversity on broadcast TV during an
event to launch the Future of TV Coalition.

Former Ambassador Andrew Young, one of the principals of the recently launched
Bounce TV broadcast network, was on hand. Bounce TV is the first broadcast
network programmed specifically to black Americans. He said networks like
Bounce provided the opportunity for smaller business to buy TV advertising.

“Almost anything is possible when you have the outlet,” he said.

Young announced that Gannett’s WUSA-TV Ch. 9 would start carrying Bounce on one
of it’s digital multicast channels. Gannett also carries Bounce on WATL-TV in
Atlanta.

Gordon Smith, chief of the NAB and a former member of the Senate Commerce
Committee during the digital transition, said one of the hopes for taking TV
digital was that broadcasters would “strive for diversity, and... become more
mobile and use [the] spectrum efficiently and inclusively.”

Vme was held up as an example. The Spanish-language diginet launched by PBS
member stations across the United States is now the fourth largest
Spanish-language broadcast network, said Carmen DeRienzo founding president and
CEO. She said that 23 percent of U.S. Hispanic households comprising 12 million
people--many of whom are low income--relied on broadcast-only TV.

Dave Lougee, president of Gannett, a member of two organizations promoting
mobile DTV, said stations reaching half the U.S. audience were ready to launch
the service. It will target smartphones, tablets and cars, and one of the
groups--Mobile Content Venture--is “getting commitments from consumer
electronics makers, he said.

Richard Schneider was also at the event. Schneider started Antennas Direct, the
St. Louis area maker of broadcast TV antennas. Schneider is a vocal proponent
of over-the-air TV who says adoption continues to grow, despite the predictions
that it would diminish after the June 2009 DTV transition.

“Growth has accelerated since digital transition,” he said. “Most of the
customers who are buying them are not the elderly, not the indigent, but
25-somethings.”

Schneider said that he initially built 100 antennas for the online business.
Those sold out in 48 hours. The next batch of 250 sold out in 22 hours. The
original goal, he said, was to sell 25 a month. The company shipped 80,000
antennas last month alone, he said.

“We don’t even have Walmart yet, but they called up because they’re seeing a
shift as well,’ he said.

Members of the Future of TV Coalition include the participants--Bounce, VME, the Open Mobile Video Coalition, Antennas Direct--as well as Qubo, a joint venture of ION Media and Scholastic Corp., County Executives of America, The Center for Asian American Media, Digitenna, MHz Networks, This TV, The Country Network, DLT Entertainment, the New York Television Festival, LATV Networks, Pacific Islanders in Communications, and Native American Public Telecommunications.
~ Deborah D. McAdams

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